HANOI, Vietnam (AP) — The thugs came after dark, as Viet Khoa Do and his family were getting ready for bed. He says they punched him, kicked him, stole his camera, and terrified his wife and children.

Do, a high school math and geography teacher, thinks the message was clear: Stop blowing the whistle on school corruption — or else.

For several years, Do has been fighting the petty bribery and cheating that plagues schools across Vietnam, where poorly paid teachers and administrators squeeze money out of even poorer parents.

Vietnam’s leaders approved a sweeping anti-corruption law in 2005, but the implementation is uneven. The country still ranks poorly on global corruption surveys, and for ordinary Vietnamese who treasure education, school corruption is perhaps the most infuriating of all.

Few dare to fight it, for fear of retaliation.

A slight, ordinary-looking man from a farming village, 40-year-old Do made a dramatic entrance onto the national scene two years ago. He videotaped students cheating on their high school graduation exams while their teachers watched and did nothing. State-owned TV stations played the tape repeatedly.

With TV cameras in tow, Vietnam’s education minister went to Do’s house to hand him a certificate praising his courage. Do appeared on Vietnam’s version of the Larry King show. The principal of the Van Tao High School, where Do has taught since 2000, was transferred.

But back in his farming village of Van Hoa, about 15 miles outside Hanoi, Do got anything but a hero’s welcome.
Teachers and administrators resented the unflattering spotlight. Even among parents and students, who stood to gain most from Do’s efforts, few came to his defense.

“All the parents wanted was to get their children through school and into jobs, even if they had to cheat to pass their exams,” Do said.

“The entire community has shunned me,” Do said. “They harass me on the phone, they send me letters. They say I put my thirst for fame ahead of their children’s welfare. Some of them even threatened to kill me.”

Thinh Van Nam, 27, a teacher at the school, thinks Do has brought his problems on himself.

“Khoa [Do] says we isolated him, but it is not true,” Nam said. “When someone feels ostracized by his peers, he needs to ask himself why.”

Matters escalated last month, when the four men came to Do’s house — two of them guards at his school, according to news reports. Police are still investigating.

Do has also run afoul with the new principal, Xuan Trung Le, after sending a letter to national and local officials alleging that Le imposed various unfair fees to enrich school staff at parents’ expense.

One of Do’s biggest complaints is the “extra classes” implemented at his school and others across the country, in which teachers tutor students for money.

“If they don’t go, the teachers give them bad grades,” said Do.

A teacher can triple a salary by packing students into the sessions, which cost parents about $6 a week — nearly as much as they earn farming rice.

Principal Le did not respond to an interview request. But he was quoted in the People’s Police newspaper saying enrollment in the classes is voluntary.

Le reportedly said Do “did not always concentrate on his teaching and follow the school regulations,” and “he used his camera and recorder too much, so people did not feel comfortable talking to him.”

One man defending the teacher is Van Thuc Vu, whose son goes to the school. “He is raising his voice against these absurd requirements imposed by the school,” he said.

“He is really brave,” said Xuan Dung Giang, a math teacher. “I admire him for his courage and patience.”

Other schools have offered to hire Do.

“I thought we should support him,” said Van Nhu Cuong, a Hanoi headmaster who tried to hire him. “We really need people who dare to speak out.”

Do declined because the school is too far from his home.

His wife, Thi Nga Nguyen, worries about her husband’s crusade.

“This has caused us a lot of stress,” she said. “I wish everyone would join the fight against corruption so that wewouldn’t be the odd ones out.”

No matter what happens, Do said, he won’t stop fighting to uphold the ideals of honesty and integrity promoted by the communist revolutionaries who freed Vietnam from colonial rule.

“Many teachers are soiling the image of education,” he said. “Corruption is a betrayal of communist ideology and of the country.”(end)